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Tuesday, July 31, 2012

2011 Interview Dale Plummer, Good Thing

Colby College head coach Dale Plummer mans the third base coaching box during a recent game at Trinity College in Connecticut.

The Greatest 21 Days is away this week. While I'm away, I'm reposting previous interviews. This is the sixth interview I did for the site, Dale Plummer. The Greatest 21 Days caught up with Plummer in April 2011. This interview first appeared shortly afterward. Plummer remains Colby coach for 2012.

Dale Plummer's Colby College Mules gathered around their coach for their post-game talk.

Colby had just had a tough day at Hartford, Conn.'s Trinity College, losing by a score of 19-8.

"The good thing about this," Plummer quoted himself as telling his players, "is we get to go home, take a shower, get a good meal and then come back and do it again tomorrow."

While the Colby College Mules could count on coming back to do it again, there was once a time in Plummer's life when tomorrow was far from a certainty.

Before his college coaching career, Plummer played seven years in the minor leagues, for the Mets and the Red Sox. But, in 1992, in the middle of his fifth season, third with time at AAA, Plummer felt a pain in his midsection.

That pain, turned out to be cancer.

He had gone from being a pitcher on the brink of making the major leagues, to a cancer patient, unsure of what would happen.

But he made it back, eventually signing with his childhood team, the Boston Red Sox. He went from not being able to run between two telephone poles, to being told by his manager he'd gotten called up to the major leagues. But call-up came with the realization that he couldn't go - an injury meant he couldn't pitch.

He also couldn't realize his childhood dream of playing for the Boston Red Sox.

"It's going to be with me for the rest of my life, it really is," Plummer told The Greatest 21 Days. "I try to make the best of it. The game's a tough game. I had the baseball rug pulled out from underneath my feet more than once."

Coach Dale Plummer talks with Colby College junior Devlin McConnell after McConnell made third

Plummer spoke with The Greatest 21 Days after the loss to Trinity College, at the Colby bench. A native of Maine, Plummer first signed on with Colby in 2006 as an assistant.

He became head coach the following year and is now in his fifth season navigating the Mules through the New England Small College Athletic Conference.

Plummer brings with him the seven years he played in the minors, getting paid to play the game. The college game of the NESCAC, Plummer said, is little different from the pro game.

"I tell them the game's the same," Plummer said. "It really is. Instead of competing against the pitcher, or competing against the other team, you're really competing against yourself."

Plummer's competition as a professional began in 1988, selected by the Mets in the 23rd round, out of the University of Maine. He moved up to AA Jackson in his second season, and AAA Tidewater his third.

But he couldn't crack the Mets pitching staff. He stayed at Tidewater for 1991 and 1992. In 1992, the reliever picked up four wins, with an ERA of 3.57. Plummer even recalled hearing talk that he might get called up.

Dale Plummer, second from the left, speaks with his players after Colby College's loss to Trinity

Then came the cancer, testicular cancer. Worries about a spot on a big league roster gave way to other, more pressing, worries. Like, would he survive?

"I had a lot of faith in God," Plummer said of that time. "When you find out something like that, there's nothing you can do, so I just gave it up to Him. Because there was nothing I could do.

"Life was on hold for a while, until we got through the treatments."

Plummer got through the treatments. But the treatments took their toll. He recalled trying to run between telephone poles. He couldn't even do that.

Those telephone poles, he recalled, became the benchmark for his come back.

"It was tough," Plummer recalled. "It was really tough to come back. But I worked every day. I made sure I went at least one more telephone pole every day. That was my goal."

"I had nothing to lose," Plummer added a short time later. "I was out of the game. I almost died. I had nothing to lose. That's why enjoy each day put the uniform on."

His come back earned him a slot back at AAA for 1993. He went 7-3 with four saves and an ERA of 5.16. After that year, Plummer was released. He went unsigned for 1994.

Then, for 1995, the strike year, his favorite team as a child, the Red Sox came calling to sign him, and then to bring him up to the majors.

Part 2 Bigger Plans

Monday, July 30, 2012

2011 Interview Hugh Kemp, Lessons Learned

Hugh Kemp pitching for the AAA Nashville Sounds. Kemp pitched in Nashville three seasons in the Reds organization, from 1987 to 1989 without getting a call up to Cincinnati. (Photo Provided)

The Greatest 21 Days is away this week. While I'm away, I'm reposting previous interviews. This is the fifth interview I did for the site, Hugh Kemp. The Greatest 21 Days caught up with Kemp in March 2011. This interview first appeared shortly afterward.

On the mound for DeKalb College, Hugh Kemp knew a coaching visit to the hill was more than enough to draw ragging from the opposing dugout.

That's because the coach coming to the mound was his father, Bill Kemp. The taunts came as Kemp's supposed plea to his dad to leave him in the game.

"It really just made me mad," Kemp recalled to The Greatest 21 Days recently, referring to the taunts. "Then he'd make me madder because he would come out there and get after me, kind of like how you might grab your son by the arm when he'd done something wrong."

Kemp credits his father's help with making him into the pitcher he became. Kemp went on to pitch for the University of Georgia and play eight seasons in the minors with the Reds and the Pirates. He never made the majors, but stayed one step away from the ultimate goal for five seasons.

It was a fate, staying at AAA, that Kemp would later attribute to lack of consistency. But, while he didn't make the majors, he did make the 40-man roster once. It was an event he recalled learning about like everyone else: through the newspaper.

When his career finally ended, Kemp, a religious man, credited God with helping him get as far as he did - and ending it when it ended. Away from baseball, Kemp and his wife helped tend to her ailing father and start his post-playing career.

Kemp spoke to The Greatest 21 Days by phone from his Charlotte-area home. He's spent much of the last two decades there with his wife Carol and their family that grew to include three children.

And it's a sports loving family. His daughter Alexandria, now 22, played softball through high school. Daughter Amy, 18, ran track. Kemp recalled his son Ross, now an eighth grader, banging on the back door with a bat as an 18-month-old, wanting to go out and play.

It was also with his son Ross that Kemp recalled going to Cooperstown for the first time last year, with Ross' youth team. They got tour the Hall of Fame itself. Their three-hour trip through the museum could have easily been double that, he recalled.

Hugh Kemp's father, Bill Kemp, center, takes part in the Georgia Perimeter Alumni Day. Bill Kemp coached baseball and his son at DeKalb College, which later became Georgia Perimeter. Photo courtesy of Georgia Perimeter's Alumni Day Gallery.

But for Kemp, it was his own father, now 80, who taught him the fundamentals of the game, the fundamentals that he is now teaching to his own son.

"One thing my dad taught me more than anything was how to be a winner, how to be tough and never to give in, which is important," Kemp said. "You might have talent, but if you don't have heart, desire and a will to never quit or give in, your talent will probably take you only so far."

"I probably wouldn't have done near things I was able to do," Kemp said later, "if it hadn't been for the lessons he taught me."

Kemp's heart and desire took him on to the University of Georgia, where he struck out 11 Florida Gators in an April 1983 game and earned a selection by the Reds in the 13th round of that June's draft.

He would go on to have an even more impressive strike-out game later that year, one where he struck out 20 for the legendary Billings Mustangs.

Hugh Kemp in the Nashville bullpen. Kemp played for Nashville from 1987 to 1989. (Photo Provided)

Taken by the Reds in the 13th round, Kemp was sent to short-season Billings, in Montana.

Coming from college, he'd already been away from home. He'd even spent a summer playing in Alaska. So the transition from college to the pros was a smooth one.

On the field that smooth transition showed. He recalled that 20 strikeout game, a number that was one off the league record.

It was a feat even Kemp was surprised he'd reached.

"I think the strike zone expanded pretty well that night," Kemp said with a laugh.

He'd never struck out that many in a game in his life. The most he recalled setting down was 17 at DeKalb College. But, here he was, just short of the Pioneer League record.

"I wasn't really a strike out pitcher," Kemp said. "I just happened to have good stuff that night and I could throw anything at any time, and kept them guessing."

He went 9-3 that year, with an ERA of 2.21. He was also credited with a total of 138 strikeouts in 110 innings. And, with a team that included the likes of Rob Dibble, Jeff Montgomery and Kurt Stillwell, along with Kemp, the Mustangs won the 1983 Pioneer League title.

For 1984, Kemp moved to single-A Cedar Rapids. He also kept up his Billings pace. He went 11-9, with a 2.79 ERA. He also struck out another 143 in 164 innings.

Kemp made the next step for 1985, to the Florida State League. By the time the year was out, Kemp would make two more steps up - just one more step and he'd be in the majors.

Along with those two jumps, Kemp got some advice from a Hall of Fame pitcher, Sandy Koufax. Just after being told he'd been promoted to AA Vermont, Kemp's Tampa team was playing the Dodgers at Vero Beach. A teammate and former Dodger farmhand saw Koufax and introduced the two.

Kemp recalled the Hall of Famer telling him to simply work hard and not run his mouth as he moved up. And Kemp tried to do what he was told.

Starting 1985 at single-A Tampa, Kemp jumped to AA Vermont, then, by the end, he was at AAA Denver.

His first game at Denver was an away game, he recalled, at Buffalo's War Memorial Stadium. It was a stadium steeped in history, something Kemp appreciated. The Natural was filmed there, Kemp noted. O.J. Simpson also ran for 2,000 yards in that stadium.
He went five innings that day. "I was nervous from the first pitch, until they took me out," Kemp recalled.

Kemp started seven games for Denver that year, going 2-3 with an ERA of 3.12.

He also did well enough that year to get promoted to the Reds' 40-man winter roster in November.

It was news that would be welcome by any player. And, for Kemp, it was welcome - after he learned of it from the newspaper. Looking at the sports section one day, there he was in the transactions list.

"I hadn't even been called by the Reds at that point and told anything, which was OK, I didn't care," Kemp said. "I was pretty excited."

Kemp was student teaching that off season, he recalled his teacher making a huge deal out if it. The talk, though, made Kemp uncomfortable. He wasn't one to talk about his accomplishments. Even after he met his wife, he recalled, she didn't know he was a baseball player until maybe three weeks in. They met as he finished up at Georgia.

Still, it was good news.

"I was very humbled by it," Kemp said. "I was excited and I knew I had to work that much harder to have that chance."

And he did. He ran, he threw, all the things he needed to do, coming into camp in good shape, he said.

But he never made that final jump to the majors. Looking back, Kemp believes what held him back was his consistency, or lack there of.


Kemp rapidly made it to AAA, making it there in 1985. But that quick ascent didn't continue.

Over the next five seasons, he remained in AAA, without a call up. And Kemp believes he knows why.

"It boils down to consistency," Kemp said. "I had some real good years, but I had some years that weren't too good either. Talent wise, maybe I had enough. But, when you look at it, it's all about consistency in any sport, but really in life. I guess i wasn't consistent enough.

"But, hey, that's the way it goes."

Kemp also played in the Reds system, a team that had some good pitchers in the majors. Kemp realizes that, had he been with another team, like his hometown Braves, he might have gotten that chance.

"It's all about timing, it's all about being in the right place at the right time," Kemp said, "but, most of all, it's all about consistency."

But, while Kemp didn't get to go to the majors, he did get to go to a lot of other places. One winter, he went to Venezuela and played there. He also played in the Venezuelan league All-Star Game, picking up the win.

Kemp went to South America after a 1987 season where he went 6-10 with a 4.64 ERA. He hadn't been consistent enough. Coming back, Kemp returned to AAA and pitched in another All-Star game, the AAA All-Star Game.

It was during that time that Kemp's manager told him that Kemp had been recommended for promotion to the majors, twice, Kemp recalled. But the Reds didn't go along with that recommendation.

Kemp, though, also quickly added that the players who went up instead were deserving of the promotions.

"I understand it," Kemp said. "They still wanted me to prove that I could still be consistent. It just didn't work out.

"God had his plans for my life," Kemp added. "You don't know it at the time. I wanted it to be baseball, and, for a time, that's what it was. ... but it's the way it is."

Kemp stayed with the Reds through 1989, signing with the Pirates for 1990. But it was his last year playing ball.

Kemp could have extended his career into 1991, he recalled, by going to Mexico. Other matters, however, were more pressing.

The plan had changed.

Speaking with Pirates general manager Larry Doughty that spring, Doughty was honest about Kemp's chances. Doughty, someone Kemp had known from the Atlanta area, almost apologized for his assessment that Kemp didn't really have a chance then to make the big club.

No apology was needed, Kemp recalled responding. "I said, 'you earn what you get," Kemp recalled. "And obviously at that point, I hadn't earned it."

Shortly after that, Kemp was released. He had that chance to go to Mexico with the Braves. But the Braves couldn't guarantee that Kemp would be in AAA Richmond by June. Kemp also just didn't want to extend his career by going to Mexico.

It was time for him to get out.

But it also came at a time when Kemp and his wife could go to Virginia and help her mother tend to her father. His wife's father was dying of cancer. They stayed with him until he passed away that June.

Shortly after that, Kemp's post-baseball career began, getting a job offer with a national fund raising company.

"I look back on those things," Kemp said, "and there's a bigger plan that was for me and Carol, my wife, then for me playing baseball.

"Would I have loved to play? Sure. I loved the game and I miss the game to this day, that pro ball side of it. But, you know what? I get to coach my son, but I also coach some high school ball."

"The timing of everything is all on Christ," Kemp added later.

Kemp has gone on to work with the Charlotte-area consulting firm NouvEON, for a boss that encourages him work around his coaching commitments.

He's also got his wife and three children, his children going through school to pursue their own dreams.

"I look back on it," Kemp said of his playing days, "and a lot of times, I was very fortunate and very blessed to do something I truly loved to do out of college.

"I got to do something that I loved, that most people don't get to do for one day. So I know how fortunate and lucky I am and I'm thankful for that."

Sunday, July 29, 2012

2011 Interview Rick Lancellotti, Christmas Morning

Rick Lancellotti stands next to a row of bats at his baseball academy. Several of the bats mark milestones from his 17-season career

The Greatest 21 Days is away this week. While I'm away, I'm reposting previous interviews. This is the fourth interview I did for the site, Rick Lancellotti. The Greatest 21 Days caught up with Lancellotti in February 2011. This interview first appeared shortly afterward. 

Part 1:
Christmas Morning | Part 2: Moving Up
Part 3:
Stunned | Part 4: Lived It | Postscript: How Cool It Was

Rick Lancellotti remembers it vividly. It was August 1982 and his AAA manager casually told Lancellotti he wasn't going to make 100 RBIs on the year.

Already at 95, there was no way Lancellotti wouldn't make 100, Lancellotti responded. Unless there was some intervention by his manager, Doug Rader.

"I go, 'Why, are you going to hold everybody up at third?' " Lancellotti recalled. "He goes 'no, I'm gonna send you to the big leagues."

His teammates immediately rushed him, jumping on him and congratulating him. They knew how hard it was to get that call, Lancellotti said.

"It's like the biggest thrill you can imagine," Lancellotti told The Greatest 21 Days in an sit-down interview at his baseball school outside Buffalo. "It's like being 5 years old, coming down the stairs for Christmas, you're head's coming off your body."

Lancellotti was fortunate enough to see time in three major league seasons, his first marked his first major league hit and RBIs, by a game-saving catch, and then then a life-draining dressing-down by his Hall of Fame manager.

Beyond that first big league season, Lancellotti's career would take multiple turns, some he would later regret. Others he would not regret one bit.

Lancellotti recounted many of those turns to The Greatest 21 Days at his Buffalo School of Baseball. He has taught the game there since 1993, the year after his retirement from baseball.

At the school, Lancellotti works with young players, passing along the lessons he learned in his 17 years as a player. Many of the key moments of that career are displayed on the baseball school's walls in the form of bats, photographs and news articles and a map.

The map on the school wall. "Where pro ball took me during 17 years," it reads. Not pictured are Japan, Italy, Mexico, Columbia and Venezuela.

Lancellotti's playing days took him through such varying places as Charleston, S.C., and Salem, Va., to Hawaii, Las Vegas and Pawtucket, where he made it into the 1990 CMC set, his No. 24 bat laying over his left shoulder on the card photo.

It also took him to Japan and Italy, the Japan choice he would come to regret.

Wherever he went, he hit home runs, so many that he got a record he didn't know he had and didn't want.

Then, in spring 1995, Lancellotti used the strike and replacement ball to speak his mind to a major league union he felt didn't care about those like himself who put their time in in the minor leagues and had little to show for it when it was all over.

But in August 1982, Lancellotti was going to the big leagues.

He was told of his call up as the Islanders visited Vancouver, and before the game. The call-up meant Lancellotti wasn't playing that night. Lancellotti wanted to play, but Rader kept him out, guarding against injury to his young hitter.

The next morning, Lancellotti was on his way to San Diego. He had already just flown in to Vancouver from Hawaii. Now, after another series of flights, he was in Southern California.

Getting to the clubhouse, he encountered Padres Manager Dick Williams. His new manager asked how he felt. After the endless flights, Lancellotti kept how he really felt to himself. He felt fine, he told Williams.

That was good enough for Williams, who relayed Lancellotti would play first base that night.

An outfielder by trade, Lancellotti had only played first base sporadically. He believes he wore out two coaches that afternoon, making them hit him ground balls to field.

In the lineup, his first at bat came that night, Aug. 27, 1982. In the on-deck circle, Lancellotti looked out at the major league crowd and tried to compose himself. He also worried, whatever he did, he didn't want to strike out.

It was his first at bat, the one everyone would be asking about. At the plate, facing the Cardinals' Jaoquin Andujar, Lancellotti struck out.

"I was screaming at myself, swearing at myself," Lancellotti said. "My teammates said 'it's only your first at-bat' and I'm like 'That's the problem.'"

He went 0-4 that night. His first hit, though, came two nights later, in his second game.

In the bottom of the third, Luis Salazar walked, loading the bases and bringing Lancellotti up.

After a Cardinal meeting on the mound, Lancellotti expected the ball away. It was what he'd always had trouble with.

But Lancellotti soon sent one to the wall, right between Lonnie Smith and Willie McGee. His first major league hit was a double. It also came with three RBIs.

"It was a rush," Lancellotti said, adding later, "It was so loud, you couldn't even hear yourself think."

The moment was captured in a photo displayed on his baseball school wall.

Lancellotti's helmet flew off rounding first. Padres first base coach Jack Krol picked it up and started to flip it to the bat boy. Then he realized the owner was still on second.

Lancellotti remembered Krol apologizing. Krol was so excited, he explained, he forgot Lancellotti was there.

Lancellotti responded, referencing just getting his first major league hit, "and you're the one who gets excited?" Lancellotti recalled saying. "I can't even breathe right now."

Lancellotti got to that point after six seasons in the minors, hitting 125 home runs in that span. Fourty-one of those came in one season, at AA Buffalo in 1979.

Part 1: Christmas Morning | Part 2: Moving Up
Part 3:
Stunned | Part 4: Lived It | Postscript: How Cool It Was

Saturday, July 28, 2012

2010 Interview Jim Pankovits, Be Ready

Tri-City ValleyCats manager Jim Pankovits coaches third as a ValleyCat swings. (G21D Photo)
The Greatest 21 Days is away this week. While I'm away, I'm reposting previous interviews. This is the third interview I did for the site, Jim Pankovits. The Greatest 21 Days caught up with Pankovits, manager at short-season Tri-City, in July 2010. This interview first appeared shortly afterward. Pankovits serves as manager at AA Jackson 2012.

Jim Pankovits took some of his players aside. It was a month into the season and these were the players who, for whatever reason, were getting regular playing time.

The message from a skipper who himself spent eight full seasons in the minors before finally making the majors. Pankovits' message at this meeting: Be ready.

"You know, I was one of those guys," Pankovits, the manager of the short-season Tri-City ValleyCats told The Greatest 21 Days July 17, the day after speaking with his players. "It was just impressing upon them how important it is for them to continue to work and be ready when their opportunity comes because, chances are, they'll get an opportunity and they need to be ready."

The talk came from someone who had been there. Pankovits, a veteran of parts of six major league seasons, worked into his ninth year of minor league ball before finally making the majors.

Pankovits has been working to impart lessons he's learned over his professional playing career on younger players. It's something he's been doing since his own playing career ended in 1991. He's worked as a minor league manager and coordinator in the two decades since.

Pankovits spoke with The Greatest 21 Days Saturday in his Joe Bruno Stadium office in Troy, NY. Pankovits is in his second year managing the short-season affiliate of the Houston Astros, the parent club he played much of his career for.

Tri-City Valley Cats manager Jim Pankovits, No. 20, at the plate before a July 2010 game at Bruno Stadium in Troy, NY. (G21D Photo)
Pankovits was drafted by the Astros in 1976 out of the University of South Carolina. He made a quick ascent to AAA, first appearing there, one step from the majors, in 1978.

Before his career was over in 1991, Pankovits would play at AAA at some point during 11 seasons. By the time Houston called in 1984, that number had hit seven.

With so much of his time spent one step from the majors, by 1984, playing in the big leagues had ceased being on his mind, he recalled. But he did get off to a good start. "When you're playing real well, you're playing day-to-day and looking for the next game, really," Pankovits recalled.

It was on a road trip that Pankovits got the call. His Tucson Toros had just played in Las Vegas and now they were headed to Honolulu, to play the Islanders. It was a long flight, and Pankovits hadn't gotten any sleep after the last game.

As they landed in Hawaii, Pankovits got the news: He had another flight, in three hours, he was going to Houston. It was enough for the soon-to-be rookie to hope for a days' delay in the realization of his career-long goal.

"I hadn't slept in two days and I got to the ballpark that afternoon, and I'm praying I'm not playing," Pankovits recalled. "Fortunately, I didn't get in that night. The next day, I got in and I got a base hit."

Valley Cats manager Jim Pankovits, right, visits the mound in July 2010 at Bruno Stadium in Troy, NY. (G21D Photo)
In fact, in his first seven games, Pankovits hit a solid .364, according to The New York Times. It was enough to get noticed. It was also enough, Pankovits recalled, to give the 28-year-old rookie the support he needed.

"I really think that was a big reason why I had some confidence and had the ability to play a few more years," Pankovits said, "because I felt, right off the bat, that I could play in the big leagues."

But, back at that first base hit, Pankovits quickly described the situation. It was off left-handed reliever and closer for the Pirates, Rod Scurry, his Astros were down. "It was kind of the story of my career," Pankovits said, "facing a late-inning closer in late-inning pinch-hit role."

It was also the story of his career that Pankovits made himself useful wherever needed, his versatility. During his major league career, Pankovits played every position but pitcher. It got him five seasons with the Astros, and two at-bats in the 1986 playoffs. While he didn't get a hit, Pankovits called the playoff at-bats a highlight of his career.

Pankovits played with the Astros through 1988, when he was released. It was in 1990 that Pankovits got his final major league appearance, with the Red Sox. He'd played the entire year at AAA Pawtucket. The Red Sox needed a second baseman, and Pankovits, it seemed, was the closest one. The AAA season was over and Pankovits and his wife had remained in Pawtucket. He got in two games, but didn't get to bat.

Valley Cats Jim Pankovits picks up a guard from a player in June 2010 at Bruno Stadium in Troy, NY. (G21D Photo)
One more year at Pawtucket and Pankovits was sent back to AA, but not as a player, as a manager. Pankovits managed New Britain in 1993 and 1994.

The opportunity came about a decade after his first coaching offer. Pankovits recalled the offer came as he toiled at AAA and before he'd made the majors. He'd felt, rightly, that he still had gas in the tank. Also, "I wasn't ready to quit." He also enjoyed being a player.

But his move from AAA as a player to AA as a manager, Pankovits recalled was "quite a transition."

"I learned a lot about the game and managing," Pankovits said. "If it had come real easy, I don't know if I'd have learned so much so quick. But I was certainly thrown in the fire."

He returned to the Astros system in 1995, as manager for single-A Quad City in the Midwest League. A few more years managing and Pankovits moved to working as a minor league coordinator.

It wasn't until 2006, that Pankovits returned to the manager's office, with the Astros' Salem, Va., franchise. It was a move done at Pankovits' own request.

The former player missed the competition, missed having his own teams and developing players over a full season.

"There are pluses and minuses to both positions," Pankovits said of being a coordinator and a manager, "but I really missed being able to compete and trying to win games - it's the closest thing you can do to being a player."

Pankovits in his Bruno Stadium office

Friday, July 27, 2012

2010 Interview, Roger LaFrancois, Doors Opened


Batavia Muckdog Alan Ahmady takes a swing from the on-deck circle as Muckdog Joey Bergman waits for a pitch The hitting coach for Ahmady, Bergman and the rest of the Muckdogs is former major leaguer Roger LaFrancois.(G21D Photo)
The Greatest 21 Days is away this week. While I'm away, I'm reposting previous interviews. This is the second interview I did for the site, Roger LaFrancois. The Greatest 21 Days caught up with LaFrancois, coach at short-season Batavia, in June 2010. This interview first appeared shortly afterward. LaFrancois remains the Batavia hitting coach for 2012.

Boston Red Sox manager Ralph Houk was an old-school manager, Roger LaFrancois recalled. He was a manager who started nine, and played nine, hardly using his bench.

It was a managing style that led to LaFrancois getting the distinction of being on Houk's major league roster the entire 1982 season, but only getting 10 at-bats and a single start, that start coming on the final day of the year.

"I didn't say anything," LaFrancois said of his time on the bench. "I was just happy to be there. But it led to a lot of good opportunities.

"In a lot of ways, 1982 opened a lot of doors for me," LaFrancois added, "not only playing in the big leagues, but making a career out of coaching."

It was in Boston that LaFrancois got to know Walt Hriniak, Red Sox hitting coach. When Hriniak left for the White Sox in 1989, LaFrancois followed, becoming hitting coach for the White Sox' AAA team in Vancouver, and getting himself in the 1990 CMC set.

LaFrancois is now the hitting coach at short-season Batatia, NY, with the NY-Penn League's Muckdogs. He spoke to The Greatest 21 Days in his Batavia office June 26, 2010, before the Muckdogs took on the State College Spikes.

Batavia coach Roger LaFrancois in the Dwyer Stadium dugout in June 2010. (G21D Photo)

LaFrancois returned this year to the league he first managed in 22 years earlier in 1988 with the Jamestown Expos, before joining the White Sox system.

In between, he's managed and coached at almost every level of the minors and into the independent leagues.

"It's a little different working with the younger guys as to the older guys," LaFrancois said, "but I enjoy where I'm at."

Older players, LaFrancois said, can be more set in their ways.

"Here, I think you can have a good impact with a first-year player, a first- or second-year player, which will carry on for the rest of his playing career," LaFrancois said.

"In a lot of ways, coaches at lower levels are as valuable, if not more valuable."
Muckdog Victor Sanchez readies on deck as State College Spike Kevin Decker delivers to the plate. (G21D Photo)

LaFrancois comes to Batavia having spent time as hitting coach for the independent Can-Am League's Worcester Tornados. The independent league team allowed the Norwich, Conn., native to spend more time with his high schooler son, and watch him play.

His son is now off to college, leaving LaFrancois free to join the Cardinals at Batavia, a team in the same league as Norwich's new team the Connecticut Tigers. Of course, Connecticut comes to Batavia this year. Batavia doesn't go to Connecticut. "I wish we were going there," LaFrancois said. "But maybe next year."

Being from New England, LaFrancois grew up a Red Sox fan. He recalled the thrill of being drafted by his favorite team in the eighth round of the 1977 draft. He made AAA Pawtucket by 1979 where he would largely stay through 1981.

It was in 1981 that LaFrancois took part in the longest game in professional baseball history, the 33-inning affair that began in April 1981 and didn't end until June. LaFrancois recalled catching in 25 innings of the game.
Roger LaFrancois talks with one of his players in the Dwyer Stadium dugout in June 2010. (G21D Photo)

"My legs still haven't recovered from that game," LaFrancois said.

At the plate, LaFrancois went 2 for 8, almost equaling in one game the number of at bats he would get the entire next year in Boston.

His only start of the year came on the last day of the 1982 season. The Red Sox were playing the Yankees at Yankee Stadium. In the top of the 11th, off lefty Rudy May, LaFrancois singled. He went on to score what would turn out to be the winning run.

"There's nothing like playing at Yankee Stadium, especially that last game of the year, so that was a big thrill for me," LaFrancois said, noting his parents were there to see it.

"I never played in the big leagues after that year, but, again that was a year that I just cherish," LaFrancois added. "One year in the big leagues and I got 10 at-bats. It’s something I’ll take with me for the rest of my life."

LaFrancois and Bilardello in their Dwyer Stadium office

Thursday, July 26, 2012

2010 Interview, Dann Bilardello, Respect the Game

The sun sets at Dwyer Stadium with Batavia manager Dann Bilardello coaching third. (G21D Photo)

The Greatest 21 Days is away this week. While I'm away, I'm reposting previous interviews. This is the first interview I did for the site, Dann Billardillo. The Greatest 21 Days caught up with Bilardello, manager at short-season Batavia, in June 2010. This interview first appeared shortly afterward. Bilardello remains Batavia manager for 2012.

It was a time Dann Bilardello said, where he wasn't sure he could continue.

Already a veteran of four major league seasons with the Reds and the Expos, Bilardello returned to the minors in 1987. He returned to the minors again in 1988, and for the start of 1989. It wasn't until June 1989 that he was called up again, this time for the Pirates.

"You just don't know," Bilardello told The Greatest 21 Days of his time away from the majors. "There were times in that two years, two and a half years, where I felt like hanging 'em up. So you go through periods like that, but you just try to keep battling."

Bilardello kept battling. The results not only were call-ups in four more major league seasons and appearances in 84 more major league games, but he also got a close-up look at a manager he tries to emulate today as the manager of the short-season Batavia Muckdogs.

Bilardello spoke with The Greatest 21 Days in his Dwyer Stadium office, hours before his Muckdogs took the field against the State College Spikes June 26, 2010.

Batavia manager Dann Bilardello shakes hands with the home plate umpire in a June 2010 game at Dwyer Stadium in Batavia, NY. (G21D Photo)

Upon Bilardello's return to the majors, with the Pirates, Jim Leyland was his manager. It was a great situation, Bilardello recalled, and Leyland was an outstanding manager.


"He treated me like I was not the 25th guy on the club," Bilardello said. "I learned a lot from Jim, how he managed, by watching how he did things and how he related to players. I think there's some things that he does that I try to emulate when I manage."

Bilardello returned to managing this year after three years as minor league catching coordinator for the Cardinals. He previously managed three years with the Dodgers at rookie-level and single-A and with the Red Sox at high-A Wilmington.

It's at the lower-levels that Bilardello said managers often find themselves just teaching the players how to be professional.

"The lower levels are so important to set a good foundation for the kids," Bilardello said, "teaching them the right things, the dos and don'ts. Really, just showing up on time and being ready to play every day - if we can get that out of them, at these levels, along with the fundamentals, you're ahead of the game."

Bilardello is continuing in baseball after 16 seasons as a player in pro ball. He was drafted in the first round of the 1978 draft by the Dodgers, got his first call-up in 1983 with the Reds and didn't bow out until 1994, playing for the independent Northern League's Winnipeg Goldeyes.
LaFrancois and another Muckdog in the dugout, as Bilardello coaches at third. (G21D Photo)

He hit his first major league home run off of Tom Seaver in 1983, something LaFrancois, working at his nearby desk overheard Bilardello being asked about.

"Tom Seaver, huh? Wow," LaFrancois commented. Bilardello joked back with a laugh, "yeah, I owned him."

Bilardello recalled his first major league home run itself, as awkward. What was he supposed to do? He remembers his first game, his first hit, that first home run. He also remembers his first game back after his father died, at Candlestick Park in San Francisco. He hit a home run. "That was huge," he recalled.

It was after his first home run, against the future Hall of Famer Seaver, that Bilardello told reporters he had to make sure not to stand and watch it. He didn't want to show Seaver up.

Batavia manager Dann Bilardello, No. 11, visits the mound in June 2010 at Dwyer Stadium in Batavia. (G21D Photo)
In his Batavia office, Bilardello said that is important. It wasn't that Seaver was a Hall of Famer. You don't show up anybody.

"You respect the game, you respect the players, you always respect your opponents," Bilardello said. "That's how you're supposed to play the game."

Players can also have fun. That's what the rookie Bilardello did in June 1983, sitting down to write a letter to Cardinals manager and newest Hall of Famer Whitey Herzog.

Bilardello fouled off 13 balls in the same at bat, before grounding out to third. He wrote, asking Herzog not to send him a bill for the baseballs. He was a rookie and he didn't make that much money.

Bilardello laughed remembering the letter. Herzog, he recalled, wrote back telling him not to worry about it.

"He is and was a great manager and at that time, I was just a rookie and having fun," Bilardello said, adding later, "It was one of those things, you've got to have fun in this game, enjoy the moment and, like I said, have some fun."

LaFrancois and Bilardello in their Dwyer Stadium office. (G21D Photo)

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Tim Leiper, Long Wait - 838

It was a long night for both Toledo and Scranton. They'd battled into the 16th inning tied at 5.

Then, with a single down the first base line, Tim Leiper ended that long August 1989 night. Leiper told The Toledo Blade last night he hit that single off a cut fastball.

"This is ridiculous. After a while, you get a little stir crazy," Leiper told The Blade. "When you go this long, you want to win. Absolutely, we're glad it was over."

While that was a long night and a long wait for Leiper and the Mud Hens that ended with a win, Leiper had his own long wait in the minors, one that never did end with the win of a call up to the majors.

Leiper's career began in 1985, signed by the Tigers as an undrafted free agent out of Brea-Olinda High School.

He played that first year between three teams, hitting .284 between them. He played his second year at single-A Lakeland, making AA Glens Falls in 1987.

In 1988, Leiper made AAA for the first time at Toledo, getting 22 games one step away from the majors. Leiper would go on to play each of the next two seasons between AA and AAA for the Tigers, never getting called up to Detroit.

He moved to the Mets system for 1991, the Royals for 1992, then the Pittsburgh system the next two years. But he never saw the majors.

Leiper went on to play in a total of 12 seasons, all in the minors. He saw time in seven of those seasons at AAA. He played his last recorded games in 1996.

His playing days over, Leiper has gone on to a long coaching career, also in the minors.

He began as hitting coach for AA Birmingham in 1996, the same year and team of his last recorded playing time. His first season as a manager came in 2000, at short-season Vermont.

Leiper then managed each year in the minors at one location or another through 2010, when he became a roving coordinator for the Marlins.

Three of those seasons were spent as manager at AA Altoona in the Pirates system. He wasn't renewed for 2009, instead signing on with the Marlins at high-A Jupiter.

''I've done everything in minor league baseball; I've been very fortunate,'' Leiper told The Altoona Mirror upon his departure. ''I just want to be around good people who are working together with no egos who are really in it for the right reasons, who are in it for the players and to win championships in the big leagues.'
1990 CMC Tally  
Cards Featured: 832/880 - 94.6%
Players/Coaches Featured: 843
Made the Majors: 577 - 69%
Never Made the Majors:266-31%-X
5+ Seasons in the Majors: 258
10+ Seasons in the Minors: 158-X

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Basil Meyer, Turning Points - 755

Orlando's starter Johnny Ard barely made it into the third inning. He gave up five runs on seven hits, The Orlando Sentinel wrote.

Coming in to stop the bleeding, though, was Basil Meyer. Over the next three innings of work, the reliever Meyer was perfect, The Sentinel wrote. It was also a game Orlando came back to win 7-6 in extras.

''That was a game with 900 turning points,'' Twins Vice President Bob Gebhard, in town for the contest, told The Sentinel afterward.

While Meyer came on and helped turn that game into an Orlando win, he never was able to turn his career toward the majors. His career consisted of four seasons as a pro, that year at AA Orlando being his last.

Meyer's career began in 1987, signed by the Twins as a free agent out of the University of Minnesota-Morris.

At Minnesota-Morris, Meyer played baseball, basketball and football, winning NAIA All-America Football Team honors his senior year. With the baseball team, Meyer he was all-conference three times, winning All-District First Team honors his senior year, according to the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference.

With those numbers, Meyer was also inducted into the school's Hall of Fame in 1997 and the conference Hall of Fame in 2003.

With the Twins, Meyer started at rookie Elizabethton, getting into 14 games in relief. He went 1-2, with a 5.04 ERA.

For 1988, he moved to single-A Kenosha, going 5-4 in 45 mostly relief outings. He also dropped his ERA to 2.41 and picked up seven saves.

Meyer moved to single-A Visalia for 1989, picking up 12 saves in 58 outings. His first two saves came on consecutive nights in early April, the second one picked up off of a double play.

It was in 1990 that Meyer arrived in Orlando. Over that year, which would be his last, Meyer got into 55 games, with a 4.33 ERA. In early-April, Meyer teamed up with Ard on a better day for Ard, the two throwing a three-hitter. Meyer's two innings in that game were hitless.

Meyer's career over, Meyer went on to briefly serve as a coach for the Minnesota-Morris football and baseball teams. More recently, Meyer has worked outside of sports, as a software engineer.
1990 CMC Tally  
Cards Featured: 831/880 - 94.4%
Players/Coaches Featured: 842
Made the Majors: 577 - 69%
Never Made the Majors:265-31%-X
5+ Seasons in the Majors: 258
10+ Seasons in the Minors: 157

Monday, July 23, 2012

Darryl Ratliff, Was There- 724

The Sumter batter hit it deep, but Darryl Ratliff was there.

His team up 5-4 in the ninth, Ratliff ran down the ball, making an over-the-shoulder catch to preserve that May 1990 Augusta win, The Sumter Item wrote.

Ratliff ran down that ball in his second professional season. He would go on to run down balls in a total of 11 seasons as a pro, and teach others the game after his playing career was over.

Ratliff, though, never got a chance to run down balls in the majors, getting to AAA in parts of four seasons, but getting no higher.

Ratliff's career began in 1988, taken by the Pirates in the fifth round of the draft, out of Cabrillo College. Ratliff's name has also been spelled Daryl Ratliff.

Ratliff first hit the field for the Pirates in 1989, playing at rookie Princeton. The 19-year-old hit .245, stealing 10 bases.

He moved to single-A Augusta for 1990, helping save that May game and hitting .295 on the year. He also stole 24 bases.

Ratliff first made AA in 1991 with 24 games at Carolina, making Carolina full time for 1992. By May 1992, Ratliff was called by The Beaver County Times a "speedy outfield prospect," but they also noted he started slow at the plate, hitting .216. He ended up hitting .240.

Ratliff, though, didn't make AAA until 1995, his seventh season as a pro. In 95 games at Calgary that year, he hit well, .343. He picked up three hits in one June game, but he didn't get the call to Pittsburgh.

Ratliff returned to the Pirates system for 1996, but it was his last year in affiliated ball. He played three more years, two in Mexico and one in independent ball, ending his career.

Ratliff has gone on to a career as an instructor in his home state of California. In 2001, Ratliff was credited by a high schooler with working to improve his swing and mental preparation, The Santa Cruz Sentinel wrote. For 2012, Ratliff is serving as a coach for the Santa Cruz Tritons youth baseball club.
1990 CMC Tally  
Cards Featured: 830/880 - 94.3%
Players/Coaches Featured: 841
Made the Majors: 577 - 69%
Never Made the Majors:264-31%-X
5+ Seasons in the Majors: 258
10+ Seasons in the Minors: 157-X

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Eric Nolte, Real Thrill - 508

Eric Nolte knew what he needed to improve upon, he told The Philadelphia Inquirer after a late-August 1987 start.

Judging by that start, though, a complete-game, four-hitter in his sixth big league outing, Nolte was already well on his way.

"The big thing for me is to get control of myself and not let one bad game or one bad at-bat bother me," Nolte told The Inquirer after that big start, a 3-1 win. "And tonight, I was able to maintain that control. A complete game is a real thrill for me."

Nolte had come a long way to get to that start, a long way just that year. He began the season at single-A Reno, debuting in the bigs with the Padres Aug. 1.

After 12 starts for that Padres to close out the year, Nolte made his way back to the majors in parts of three more seasons.

Nolte's career began in 1985, taken by the Padres in the sixth round of the draft, out of UCLA.

Nolte played that first year at short-season Spokane, going 3-8 in 14 starts. He moved to single-A Charleston for 1986, going 12-9, with a 3.90 ERA.

In July 1986, Nolte was the beneficiary of some good run support with Charleston, going seven innings and picking up a 10-2 win.

"When they score runs like that, it makes it so much easier," Nolte told The Charleston News and Courier. "I was able to just lay back and challenge the hitters, and see what happens."

Just over a year later, Nolte was in the majors. After starting the year at Reno, Nolte moved to AA Wichita and then debuted with the Padres Aug. 1.

In 12 starts for the Padres that year, Nolte went 2-6, with a 3.21 ERA. He returned for 1988, but only got into two games.

In 1989, Nolte came back from an emergency life-saving operation to repair a perforated ulcer. "That was the most pain I had in my life," Nolte told The Los Angeles Times days later. "I thought I was getting a burst of Alien. It was incredible. I couldn't even get in my pickup truck."

And he came back to the Padres, but for just three outings this time. He spent all of 1990 in the minors, getting back to the majors for one final season in 1991.

Late in spring training, it looked as if Nolte had a shot at the fifth spot in the Padres rotation, The Times wrote. Nolte just tried to make sure he pitched well.

"I'm going to go out there and keep it simple," Nolte told The Times. "It's not going to be like the past, where I'm thinking what will go wrong. I'll be thinking only of the positive.

Nolte made the rotation, getting six starts for the Padres. He went 3-2, but had an official ERA of over 11. By the end of May, he was released. Signing on with the Rangers, got into three more games, what turned out to be his final games in the majors.

Nolte, though, played three more seasons in the minors, going through three different organizations. He last played in 1994, for independent San Bernardino.
1990 CMC Tally  
Cards Featured: 829/880 - 94.2%
Players/Coaches Featured: 840
Made the Majors: 577 - 69%-X
Never Made the Majors:263-31%
5+ Seasons in the Majors: 258
10+ Seasons in the Minors: 156

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Kevin Ward, Kept Going - 602

Going into his ninth professional season in 1991, Kevin Ward was also starting work with his third organization, the Padres. He'd made AAA in three of those seasons, never making the majors.

Then, in May 1991, he finally made it.

"I'm a Christian and I always felt that if I apply myself with the belief that one day it would lead to the major leagues, that it would happen," Ward told The Philadelphia Inquirer after his call. "My faith in God kept me going at a time when it didn't appear things would work."

For Ward, it would go on to work in two major league seasons, spending all of that second with the Padres in San Diego.

Ward's career began in 1983, taken by his favorite team as a child, the Phillies, in the sixth round of the draft out of the University of Arizona.

He started at short-season Bend, moving to single-A Peninsula in 1984. He hit AA Reading in 1985, then first saw AAA at Maine in 1987.

At Maine in June 1987, Ward hit a pinch-hit, game-winning home run against Pawtucket. "Kevin is a strong kid and is capable of hitting the ball out of the park," Ward's manager at Maine Bill Dancy told The Lewiston Daily Sun afterward.

Ward returned to Maine for 1988, then moved to the Athletics system for two seasons without seeing Oakland.

Then he signed with the Padres. He debuted with San Diego May 10, 1991. In July, as the Padres visited Philadelphia, Ward finally played in the majors near where he grew up. In the stands, were 30 Ward relatives, including his parents.

"I just wanted to soak in the moment," Ward told The Los Angeles Times of seeing his family there. "It's still hard for me to believe. Ever since I was a kid growing up here, I dreamed about playing here. Now it happened."

Ward ended up playing in 44 games for the Padres that year, hitting .243, with two home runs. He then returned for 1992, playing the entire season with San Diego, getting into 81 games.

Going into 1992, though, Ward was supposed to be back at AAA and, according to The Times, he even thought of retiring. Then he got called back, and hit a late home run that proved the difference in a Padres win.

"What an amazing last 24 hours," Ward told The Times after that game. "Maybe this one will keep me around a little longer. Each time they tap me on the shoulder you get a little gun shy. You think you've seen it all during your career, this is just another episode in my career."

Ward ended up hitting .197 for the Padres that year, without ever playing a game at AAA. His career, tough would soon end. He returned for 1993, but got into just 23 games at AAA Colorado Springs with the Rockies, ending his career.

Ward has since moved on to other careers, including the restaurant business and horse racing. By 2001, he was owner of the Greystone, a restaurant in San Diego. He was also majority owner of Greystone Racing Stable, according to the Thoroughbred Times.

Of his move into horse racing, Ward told the Thoroughbred Times in 2001, "I had to replace my baseball adrenaline rush."
1990 CMC Tally  
Cards Featured: 828/880 - 94.1%
Players/Coaches Featured: 839
Made the Majors: 576 - 69%-X
Never Made the Majors:263-31%
5+ Seasons in the Majors: 258
10+ Seasons in the Minors: 156